A boot stepping on a piece of brown soil next to a tuft of thin green leaves
The Texas Climate Smart Initiative announces financial incentives for commodity producers statewide adopting climate-smart practices (Michael Miller/Texas A&M AgriLife)

The Texas Climate Smart Initiative, led by Texas A&M AgriLife Research, has announced financial incentives for farmers, ranchers and small forest owners statewide who volunteer to adopt climate-smart agricultural practices.

Representatives of the Texas Climate-Smart Initiative will work with participants selected  through an application process, helping them understand and implement climate-smart practices. Initiative leaders select new participants bimonthly. Producers who have already adopted climate-smart practices are eligible.

Prospective participants can apply at the Texas Climate Smart Initiative website. Specific incentive information is also available at the site’s producer resources page.

Producer benefits, market-based solutions

The Texas Climate Smart Initiative is a five-year large-scale pilot project to work with the state’s commodity producers. Its goal is to help producers adopt climate-smart agriculture and forestry practices, access benefits, and develop models for voluntary, market-based climate solutions.

“Our main focus in this project is to simultaneously improve resilience to climate change and mitigation of climate change through adoption of climate-smart practices,” said Julie Howe, Ph.D., soil chemistry and fertility professor in the Texas A&M Department of Soil and Crop Sciences, Bryan-College Station. Howe is the project’s principal investigator.

“Texas’ diversity in agriculture and natural resources — seen in our climates and soil — particularly, makes Texas a great place to create solutions that can be scaled to other areas of the nation and build upon existing infrastructure,” she said.

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